Dickinson

42 Conn. 491
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 42 Conn. 491 (Dickinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickinson, 42 Conn. 491 (Colo. 1875).

Opinion

Foster, J.

The appellants are the grandsons, of Mary Cotton, their mother being her illegitimate daughter. Mary Cotton was a sister of the testatrix, Eliza J. Cotton, and it is from the decree of the court of probate approving her last will that this appeal was taken. The mother and grandmother of the appellants had been dead some fifteen years at the time of the death of the testatrix, who was a single woman, having never been married. She left no parents, no brothers or sisters, and no blood relations, unless the appel« [500]*500lants are to be so considered, nearer than cousins. In the Superior Court the appellees moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the appellants were not heirs at law of the deceased, and had no interest in or title to her estate. The question thus raised is reserved for the advice of this court.

Were this question to be decided by the common law of England we should, without hesitation, advise that the appeal be dismissed. The appellants derive their title through their mother, and succeed to the same rights to which she, if living, would succeed. She was an illegitimate. In the XCYII number of the Edinburgh Review, in an article on the law of legitimacy, Gardner Peerage case, it is stated that at the time of the conquest bastards could inherit land in England, and also in Wales before the statute of Wales, 18 Edw. I. If this were so, the law was soon changed. Glanville, the earliest writer on the common law, says: “ Neither a bastard, nor any other person, not born in lawful wedlock, can be, in the legal sense of the term, an heir.” Seres awtem legitimas nullus bastardas, nee aliquis, qui ex legitimo matrimonio non est procréalas, esse potest. Lib. 7, Cap. 13. This rule, though modified in some respects by various acts of Parliament since passed, is, substantially, the law of England at this day.

The denial of all rights as an heir was not the only disability to which this class of persons was subjected in England. A bastard was the child of nobody; he was not entitled even to a name. It is however gravely asserted by the text writers that he might gain one by reputation. He did not take his mother’s place of settlement, but was settled wherever he chanced to be born. As he was related to nobody he could have no heirs, except of his own body; and so if he left no descendants, his property escheated, and now, by law, escheats to the crown. In re Wilcox Settlement,1 L. R., Chan. Div., 229. He was incapable of holy orders, and disqualified from holding any dignity in the church. In Germany, no farther back than the time of the Reformation, bastards could not give evidence on the rights of citizens, and down to a very recent period certain Saxon local laws enacted that no persons' of illegitimate birth should officiate in any judicial office. [501]*501Inquiries were made into the birth of a person, at the academies and schools, before he was admitted to the degree of doctor, or any other high dignity. By the law of Scotland he was disabled, ex defectu natalium, from bequeathing by testament without letters of legitimation from the sovereign. By statute, 6 Will. IV, Cap. 22, this disability was removed. The preamble of the act says: “ Whereas, it is just, humane, and expedient, that bastards, or natural children, in Scotland, should have the power of disposing,” &c. By statute 7 and 8 Viet., Cap. 88, trustees or managers of savings banks are empowered to pay the money deposited by an illegitimate depositor, dying intestate, to the persons who, in their opinion, would have been entitled to the same according to the statute of distributions, if he had been legitimate.

While the law was and is thus rigorous in its application to persons born out of lawful wedlock, it was remarkable for the liberality with which it regarded all those who were born in wedlock. No matter how soon after the marriage a birth followed, the offspring was legitimate. All children born during the coverture, though the wife lived apart from her husband in notorious adultery, were, for a long time, held legitimate, unless the husband was proved to be impotent, or beyond the four seas for so long a period before the birth as to make it a natural impossibility that he could be the father. As to posthumous children, the law, at times, has gone to foolishly absurd lengths to hold them legitimate. In the time of Edward II, the Countess of Gloucester bore a child one year and seven months after the death of the duke, and it was pronounced legitimate. In the reign of Henry VI, Mr. Baron Rolfe expressed the opinion with apparent gravity, that a widow might give birth to a child seven years after her husband’s death without injury to her reputation.

The Roman law was much less severe, and imposed fewer disabilities upon bastards than the common law. Bastards could inherit from their mothers. A distinction was made between illegitimates born of a concubine, and those born of a prostitute. The former were styled naturales, the latter, spurii. The concubine had a legal relation to the family, [502]*502which was sanctioned by the church down to the Council of Trent; and by subsequent marriage her offspring were made legitimate. The naturales were not only lawful heirs of the mother, but were entitled to support from the father. The sjpurii had no legal rights of inheritance or to a support.

The laws of the different states of our Union, differ widely as to the rights of illegitimates. Most of the states have passed statutes mitigating more or less the rigors of the common law, and conferring rights which that law- denied. The general tendency seems to be one of increasing liberality. In most, if not in all of the states, they inherit from the mother, and the mother from them. In some statés they inherit from each other, from collateral kindred, and from the father, when there has been a general, notorious, and mutual recognition. In many of the states subsequent marriage of parents legitimates. Connecticut is one of the very few states, possibly the only one, that has passed no statute defining the rights of bastards. We have a common law of our own, built up from the usages and customs of our people, and from various judicial decisions. It differs from the common law of England ánd from the Roman law.

The earliest case in our reports, where the rights of this class of persons were judicially considered, is Canaan v. Salisbury, 1 Root, 155. That was a settlement case, and it was held that a bastard was settled with the mother. The court' said that such a rule was agreeable to the law of nature and reason. This was in 1790, and was a clear departure from the common law of England, which did not' permit an illegitimate child to inherit even a local habitation or a name from the mother. This case, though decided by the Superior Court, has never been doubted, but always recognized as sound law. It has been followed and sanctioned by this court in divers cases. Hebron v. Marlborough, 2 Conn., 18; Windsor v. Hartford, id., 356; Danbury v. New Haven, 5 Conn., 584; Oxford v. Bethany, 19 Conn., 229; New Haven v. Huntington, 22 Conn., 25.

In the case of Woodstock v. Hooker, 6 Conn., 35, it was decided that a bastard born in Massachusetts, of a mother [503]*503having a settlement in this state, took the settlement of the mother. Peters, J., who gave the opinion of the court, said: “ It has been discovered in this state that a bastard is the child of his mother,” (p. 36.) In Guilford v.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Conn. 491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickinson-conn-1875.